1. G. E. Harlow, ‘Diamonds in the Twentieth Century’, in G.E. Harlow, ed., The Nature of Diamonds (Cambridge, CUP in association with the American Museum of Natural History 1998) p. 211.
2. Global Witness, A Rough Trade: The Role of Companies and Governments in the Angolan Conflict (London, Global Witness 1998) (accessed 22 January 2009).
3. See United Nations Security Council, Resolution 1173 (1998), UN Doc S/RES/1173. See also United Nations Security Council, Resolution 864 (1993), UN Doc S/RES/864; United Nations Security Council, Resolution 1127 (1997), UN Doc S/RES/1127; United Nations Security Council, Resolution 1176 (1998), UN Doc S/RES/1176; United Nations Security Council, Resolution 1237 (1999), UN Doc S/RES/1237.
4. See United Nations Security Council, Resolution 1306 (2000), UN Doc S/RES/1306; United Nations Security Council, Resolution 1408 (2002), UN Doc S/RES/1408; United Nations Security Council, Resolution 1341 (2001), UN Doc S/RES/1341.
5. See United Nations General Assembly, Resolution 55/56 (2000), UN Doc A/RES/55/56; Global Witness, supra n. 2; L. Forest,’ sierra Leone and Conflict Diamonds: Establishing a Legal Diamond Trade and Ending Rebel Control over the Country’s Diamond Resources’, 11 IICLR (2000) p. 633; T.M. Shaw, Conflict and Peace-Building in Africa: The Regional Dimension (Helsinki, UNU 2003) p. 10; O. Olsson, Conflict Diamonds (2004) pp. 1–2 (accessed 22 January 2009); I. Josipovic, ‘Conflict Diamonds: Not so Clear-Cut’, 25 HIR (2003) p. 10; T.M. Price, ‘The Kimberly Process: Conflict Diamonds, WTO Obligations, and the Universality Debate’, 12 MJGT (2003) p. 7. See also M. Maggi, ‘The Currency of Terrorism: An Alternative Way to Combat Terrorism and End the Trade of Conflict Diamonds’, 15 PILR (2003) p. 514.